甲烷卫星发射旨在加速减少甲烷排放

该卫星将以前所未有的精度追踪甲烷排放量。(图片来源:甲烷卫星))

技术

2024 年 3 月 4 日,由环境非营利组织环境保护基金开发和资助的突破性甲烷探测卫星 MacetSAT 发射进入轨道,旨在加快减少甲烷排放

甲烷是一种强效温室气体,在释放到大气中后的前 20 年内,其升温能力是二氧化碳的 80 倍以上。当今全球变暖的 30% 左右是由化石燃料作业、农业和其他工业产生的甲烷造成的。

甲烷卫星每天绕地球 15 圈,将测量小至十亿分之三的甲烷浓度变化,最初重点关注石油和天然气作业。MacetSAT 可以检测整个油田的甲烷含量。它可以检测和量化其他卫星无法看到的大范围内的小量排放,还可以查明单一来源的大量排放,以提供甲烷问题的完整情况。除了确定特定地区的排放源和排放率之外,ManeSAT 还将能够比较全球主要石油和天然气地区的排放损失率以及一段时间内的表现。专门开发的分析技术将追踪这些排放到这些目标区域内的来源。

来自甲烷卫星的数据将公开,以便企业、政府监管机构和其他利益相关者能够加快减排速度、跟踪进度并追究污染者的责任。任何人都可以直接从 www.MacetSAT.org 和 Google Earth Engine 上获取交互式排放数据。

“随着我们继续对能源系统进行脱碳,消除化石燃料作业、农业和其他部门产生的甲烷污染是减缓变暖速度的最快方法,”法国电力公司总裁弗雷德·克虏伯“要做到这一点,需要在全球范围内获得有关这种污染的全面数据。甲烷卫星将通过追踪排放源向我们展示机遇的全部范围。”

“甲烷卫星的超级能力是能够在大范围内以高分辨率精确测量甲烷水平,包括在许多地区排放量最大的较小的分散源,” EDF首席科学家兼甲烷卫星项目负责人史蒂文·汉堡说。“了解有多少甲烷来自何处以及其速率如何变化至关重要。”

减少甲烷排放的势头不断增强,目前已有 150 个国家签署了《全球甲烷承诺》,到 2030 年将其集体甲烷排放量比 2020 年的水平减少至少 30%。超过 50 家石油和天然气公司签署了《石油和天然气脱碳宪章》在 COP28 上,其中包括承诺到 2030 年将甲烷排放量减少到接近零。12 月,EDF、彭博慈善基金会、国际能源署、RMI 和联合国环境规划署国际甲烷排放观测站发起了一项新举措,以提供透明度和问责框架,帮助跟踪和推动石油和天然气行业的甲烷减排。

一月份,拜登政府提出了对超额甲烷排放收费的规则,这将需要准确的排放报告。欧洲立法将要求天然气进口商提供经验排放数据,而日本和韩国(两个最大的液化天然气买家)已启动计划,开始要求供应商提供排放数据。

原文链接/oilreviewmiddleeast

MethaneSAT launches in a bid to accelerate reduction of methane emissions

The satellite will track methane emissions with unprecedented accuracy. (Image source: MethaneSAT))

Technology

On 4 March 2024, MethaneSAT, a groundbreaking methane-detecting satellite developed and funded by the environment non-profit Environmental Defense Fund, was launched into orbit, with the aim of speeding up the reduction of methane emissions

Methane is
a potent greenhouse gas with more than 80 times the warming power of carbon dioxide, over the first 20 years after it is released into the atmosphere. Methane from fossil fuel operations, agriculture and other industries is responsible for around 30% of today’s global warming.

Circling the Earth 15 times a day, MethaneSAT will measure changes in methane concentrations as small as three parts per billion, focusing initially on oil and gas operations. MethaneSAT can detect methane levels from entire oilfields. It can detect and quantify small emissions over wide areas that other satellites cannot see, and can also pinpoint large emissions from single sources, to provide a complete picture of the methane problem. In addition to identifying emission sources and rates for a given region, MethaneSAT will enable emission loss rates to be compared across major oil and gas regions worldwide and performance over time. Specially-developed analytics will trace those emissions back to their sources within those target regions.

Data from MethaneSAT will be public to enable companies, government regulators and other stakeholders to speed up emissions reductions, track progress and hold polluters responsible. Interactive emissions data will be available to anyone directly from www.MethaneSAT.org and on Google Earth Engine.

“Cutting methane pollution from fossil fuel operations, agriculture and other sectors is the single fastest way to slow the rate of warming as we continue to decarbonise our energy systems,” said EDF president Fred Krupp. “To do that requires comprehensive data on this pollution on a global scale. MethaneSAT will show us the full scope of the opportunity by tracking emissions to their source.”

“MethaneSAT’s superpower is the ability to precisely measure methane levels with high resolution over wide areas, including smaller, diffuse sources that account for most emissions in many regions,” said Steven Hamburg, EDF chief scientist and MethaneSAT project leader. “Knowing how much methane is coming from where and how the rates are changing is essential.”

Momentum on reducing methane emissions has been growing, with 150 countries now having signed the Global Methane Pledge to cut their collective methane emissions by at least 30% from 2020 levels by 2030. More than 50 oil and gas companies signed the Oil & Gas Decarbonisation Charter at COP28, which includes a pledge to reduce methane emissions to near zero by 2030. In December, a new initiative was launched by EDF, Bloomberg Philanthropies, the International Energy Agency, RMI and the UN Environment Programme’s International Methane Emission Observatory to provide transparency and accountability frameworks to help track and drive methane emission reductions from the oil and gas industry.

In January the Biden Administration proposed rules for a fee on excess methane emissions, which will require accurate emissions reporting. European legislation will see gas importers required to provide empirical emissions data, while Japan and Korea – two of the largest LNG buyers – have launched plans to begin requiring emissions data from suppliers.